Abstract
Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecological cancer, where survival rates have had modest improvement over the last 30 years. Metastasis of cancer cells is a major clinical problem, and patient mortality occurs when ovarian cancer cells spread beyond the confinement of ovaries. Disseminated ovarian cancer cells typically spread within the abdomen, where ascites accumulation aids in their transit. Metastatic ascites contain multicellular spheroids, which promote chemo-resistance and recurrence. However, little is known about the origin and mechanisms through which spheroids arise. Using live-imaging of 3D culture models and animal models, we report that epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) cells, the most common type of ovarian cancer, can spontaneously detach as either single cells or clusters. We report that clusters are more resistant to anoikis and have a potent survival advantage over single cells. Using in vivo lineage tracing, we found that multicellular spheroids arise preferentially from collective detachment, rather than aggregation in the abdomen. Finally, we report that multicellular spheroids from collective detachment are capable of seeding intra-abdominal metastases that retain intra-tumoral heterogeneity from the primary tumor.
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Introduction
Metastasis is responsible for more than 90% of all the cancer-associated deaths. Intra-abdominal metastasis is frequently observed in gastrointestinal and gynecological cancers, in which cells disseminate and grow in the abdominal cavity. Intra-abdominal dissemination is particularly prevalent in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), the most lethal gynecological cancer, with fewer than 30% of patients surviving 5 years after diagnosis [1, 2]. The majority (85–90%) of EOCs express epithelial markers (E-cadherin and cytokeratin) and acquisition of epithelial characteristics may be necessary for cell transformation during ovarian cancer initiation [3]. The epithelial state of tumors at secondary sites is less clear, with reports of retention or loss of E-cadherin in metastases, implicating tumoral heterogeneity and epithelial plasticity in this process [3,4,5,6,7].
Ovarian cancer dissemination is associated with malignant ascites, which is present in a third of patients at diagnosis and almost all patients at recurrence, and is considered a major source of chemo-resistance, recurrence, and mortality [1, 8]. Malignant ascites contains disseminated tumor cells as single cells, or more commonly, as multicellular spheroids, in a complex fluid that constitutes a pro-tumorigenic environment [1, 5, 7, 9, 10]. Spheroids are considered bona fide metastatic units that can attach to the mesothelium and invade the extracellular matrix during dissemination [1, 9, 11,12,13,14]. Current models propose a multi-step process for intraperitoneal metastasis that includes: (1) shedding from the primary tumor; (2) evading anoikis; (3) formation of spheroids; and (4) peritoneal implantation and outgrowth [15, 16]. In comparison to the late stages of peritoneal implantation, the early stages of shedding, survival, and spheroid formation remain poorly understood. Despite the critical importance of spheroids during intra-abdominal dissemination, a long-standing question is how spheroids form. One hypothesis proposes that multicellular spheroids arise from single cells aggregating within the abdomen [13, 17]. An alternative possibility is that cells detach as groups that form spheroids. Here we report that spheroids predominantly arise from multicellular detachment from the primary tumor and are responsible for intraperitoneal metastasis. Furthermore, we report that detaching spheroids can maintain phenotypic heterogeneity of the primary tumor during dissemination.
Results and discussion
Epithelial cancer cells spontaneously detach in culture
During routine culture of epithelial ovarian cancer cells (OV90 and OVCAR3), we observed detached cells, frequently present as spheroids, floating in the culture medium. Using calcein and eithidium homodimer to detect live and dead cells, respectively, we observed that many of the detached cells were alive (Fig. S1a–c). Since cell detachment has been linked to reduced cell–cell adhesion mediated by loss of E-cadherin and acquisition of a mesenchymal phenotype, we examined expression of E-cadherin, ZEB1, and Vimentin expression by western blot (Fig. 1a). This revealed that both OV90 and OVACR3 cells retained epithelial characteristics in culture. RH6 cells, a mesenchymal derivative of OV90, were used as a control [18]. This indicates that epithelial ovarian cancer cells can spontaneously detach and survive in culture.
To further explore early events during dissemination of epithelial ovarian cancer cells we performed live-imaging to directly visualize detachment events. For this we used 3D culture environment that more accurately mimics the architecture of a tumor, where cells detach from other cells, rather than the plastic surface of a dish. Many 3D cultures are embedded in a hydrogel matrix, which mimics the extracellular matrix and stroma that cells invade through. However, unlike some other solid cancers that invade through the stroma to leave the primary site during hematological metastasis, ovarian cancer cells shed from the surface of the tumor epithelium into the abdominal cavity [2]. Therefore, we used the hanging-drop method to generated a 3D organotypic model that was free-floating, rather than embedded in extracellular matrix, and established novel imaging conditions to observe cells detaching from the cellular surface into free space using time-lapse microscopy (Fig. 1b, Videos S1–2). Under our organotypic culture conditions, OV90 cells form tight organoids, whereas OVCAR3 cells formed loose organoids, as reported previously [19]. We observed a total of 85 detachment events from OV90 organoids, of which 49% were by groups of two or more cells (Fig. 1c, d). In both single and multicellular detachment events, we observed cellular stalks that connect the leaving cell(s) with the parental cell mass (Fig. 1c, d). This indicates that for both single and collective detachment, the final step is a single-cell detachment event. Detachment events from OVCAR3 organoids were less frequent than OV90, and 17% (4/23) events detached as groups of two or more cells (Fig. 1d, S2a). Therefore, epithelial cancer cells can detach as either single cells or collectively as groups of cells in vitro.
Spheroids in ascites are generated from collective detachment
To determine whether cell clusters in ascites in vivo arise from aggregation or collective detachment, we performed lineage tracing. We generated OV90 cells expressing either GFP or mCherry and transplanted these orthotopically into contralateral ovaries of the same mouse (“Separate”), to generate one red and one green primary tumor (Fig. 2a). If spheroids in ascites arose from aggregation, then we expected the clusters would be composed of both red and green cells. Conversely, if spheroids were generated in the absence of aggregation, then we expected them to be a single color. We validated that seeding of primary tumor from the opposite color was negligible in this assay, since primary tumors remained a single color (Fig. 2b). Strikingly, we observed that about 80% of spheroids isolated from ascites were composed of single color cells, indicating that intra-abdominal mixing is an infrequent event (Fig. 2c).
Once we established that intra-abdominal aggregation is not the major mechanism to generate spheroids, we tested whether they were polyclonal, which would indicate collective detachment. For this we generated mice where GFP and mCherry-expressing cells were mixed and injected into the same ovary, creating mosaic tumors (Fig. 2b, “Mosaic”). Under these conditions, we observed mosaic (red and green) spheroids in ~60% of spheroids isolated from ascites. The proportion of mixed colored spheroids likely underestimates the frequency of multicellular detachment events in vivo, since multicellular clusters of the same color may also detach. Single-colored clusters from Mosaic primary tumors may also arise from detaching single cells that grow into clusters in ascites. Together, these data support a model by which cells detach as clusters from the primary tumor to generate spheroids in metastatic ascites with a minor contribution from aggregation. We were unable to distinguish if infrequent cases of aggregation arose from clustering of single cells or smaller multicellular spheroids.
Spheroids are thought to be responsible for metastatic spread in ovarian cancer [1, 2]. We therefore asked whether single spheroids gave rise to individual metastatic lesions within the abdominal cavity, or whether multiple spheroids contributed to individual metastatic lesions. We reasoned that if single spheroids gave rise to individual metastatic lesions, we would observe single color metastases in mice with “Separate” green and red primary tumors. Alternatively, if multiple spheroids contributed to individual metastatic lesions, we would expect mixed GFP/mCherry lesions under these experimental conditions. We observed that intra-abdominal metastases were single colored, indicating that individual metastatic lesions arose from single spheroids (Fig. 2b, c; see “Separate”). In contrast, in mice-expressing mosaic GFP/mCherry primary tumors and spheroids, the secondary lesions were also predominantly mosaic with extensive intermixing of GFP and mCherry (Fig. 2b, c; see “Mosaic”). This supports a model in which spheroids are metastatic units, and that metastatic sites are formed from single spheroids that detached as groups of cells from the primary tumor.
Our results are consistent with genetic clonal mapping of disseminated ovarian cancers in patients. McPherson et al. performed phylogenetic analysis of multiple intraperitoneal sites from individual patients, and reported that most sites were phylogenetically pure or highly related from a single phylogenetic clade [20]. However, each patient also had rare sites that were polyphyletic clones from multiple distinct clade [20]. Our data indicate that individual sites arise from single spheroids and provide a mechanism to explain divergent clonal dissemination events. We show that the majority of spheroids in ascites arise from collective dissemination of neighboring cells, which can explain the origin of the phylogentically pure or related disseminated sites. We also identified a small fraction of spheroids that form from intraperitoneal mixing, which can explain the origin of infrequent sites of polyphyletic clones observed in human ovarian cancer patients.
Detaching clusters have a survival advantage compared to detaching single cells
Our in vitro organotypic cultures demonstrated that epithelial ovarian cancer cells were able to efficiently detach as either single cells or clusters, while our in vivo data suggested a preference towards multicellular detachment. Loss of cell contact with other cells or extracellular matrix can induce apoptosis which must be overcome for cancer cells to survive and disseminate [21]. We therefore predicted that detaching epithelial clusters might have a survival advantage over single cells. To test this, we labeled cells with a fluorescent apoptosis reporter of Caspase 3/7 activity and performed live-imaging to track detachment events and their survival fate in vitro. Whereas most detaching single cells (84–89%) underwent rapid apoptosis as they left the organoid, the majority of detaching clusters avoided anoikis (Fig. 3a, b; Videos S3–6). Curiously, we observed a small number of detaching clusters from OV90 organoids that had a single cell undergo apoptosis, whereas the majority of cells in the cluster were alive. The cause of this is not known, but may arise from stress induced on individual cells within the cluster during detachment.
Clusters in ascites contain proliferating cells
In patients, a wide range of sizes of spheroids are observed [22]. We also observed a wide range of sizes of clusters in ascites, ranging from less than 20 cells (small) to over 100 cells (large) (Fig. S3a). Although some large clusters may arise during detachment, we tested whether they had proliferative capacity that could enable to smaller clusters to grow in ascites. Consistent with this idea, we observed that 38% of cells in clusters were positive for the proliferation marker Ki67 (Fig. 3c, d). This proliferative capacity was similar to that observed in both the primary and secondary tumors, indicating that proliferation is preserved throughout metastasis in multicellular clusters. Therefore, spheroids in ascites can arise from detaching cell clusters or, rarely, individual cells that retain proliferative properties of the primary tumor.
Spheroids maintain phenotypic heterogeneity during dissemination
E-Cadherin heterogeneity is well documented in primary ovarian cancers and ascites from patients, and may assist late events in metastasis like peritoneal attachment and growth [3, 23]. This prompted us to investigate whether phenotypic heterogeneity present in the primary tumor could be maintained during dissemination through collective events. We observed in vivo that regions of primary tumor were E-cadherin positive, with small patches of E-cadherin negative cells (Fig. 4a, b). Further analysis demonstrated that these cells were positive for pan-cytokeratin and negative for Vimentin in the tumor compartment, suggesting an overall epithelial phenotype. Strong Vimentin staining was present in the stroma, acting as a positive control for this marker (Fig. 4c, d). Importantly, the E-cadherin heterogeneity was maintained in ascites, with some spheroids containing both E-cadherin positive and negative sub-populations, and was also present in secondary lesions on the peritoneal wall, with no statistical difference in the proportion of E-cadherin positive and negative zones. Therefore, our results support a model by which collective detachment can maintain phenotypic heterogeneity in ascites, and subsequently in secondary tumors.
Although the interplay between specific ovarian cancer cell populations will be the focus of future studies, our results provide a conceptual model by which intra-tumor heterogeneity may be preserved through collective metastasis. Indeed, our lineage tracing indicate that individual metastatic lesions arise from single spheroids, and therefore maintaining interactions between sub-populations may provide an advantage during dissemination. In support of this idea, spheroids engineered in vitro to contain mosaic E-cadherin positive and E-cadherin negative populations displayed enhanced proliferation compared the pure populations [23]. Moreover, an association between intra-tumor heterogeneity and clinical outcomes like resistance, relapse, and mortality has been established across cancers, and can result from cooperation among sub-clones [24]. In addition to promoting survival of cells, we propose that detachment of multicellular clusters could have additional benefits during metastasis and seeding secondary sites. Tumorigenic potential can be influenced by non-cell autonomous cooperation between tumor cell populations. For example, breast cancer tumor-initiating cells communicate with mesenchymal-like niche cells to promote tumorigenicity [25]. Interactions between cancer cell populations in ovarian cancer have not been thoroughly investigated, but ovarian cancer cells do benefit from non-cell autonomous interactions with other cell types. For example, the presence of a cellular microenvironment was sufficient to enable ovarian cancer cells to form tumors in xenograft mouse models that were unable to do so when the cancer cells were injected alone [26]. Moreover, Yin et al. [17] reported that ovarian cancer spheroid formation is enhanced by tumor-associated macrophages, which provide growth support to the epithelial tumor cells through EGFR signaling to form aggregates from single cells. An important distinction with these previous experiments and ours is that previous experiments were conducted with single-cell suspensions injected intraperitoneally in mice, and therefore model mechanisms relating to how single cells aggregate to form spheroids once detached, but do not address the origin of spheroids from solid tumors [17]. Our studies provide strong evidence that collective detachment is an important mechanism that generates multicellular spheroids, but do not exclude a possible role for macrophages in supporting their growth.
In summary, we demonstrate that spheroids in metastatic ascites can arise from collective dissemination, which promotes resistance to apoptosis, maintains phenotypic heterogeneity.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Dr. Didier Trono (Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Switzerland) for lentiviral plasmids acquired through Addgene, and Dr. Patricia Tonin (McGill University) for OV90 cells. This project was supported by funds from CIHR (MOP-119482) to LM. LM is a FRQS Research Scholar – Junior 2.
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Al Habyan, S., Kalos, C., Szymborski, J. et al. Multicellular detachment generates metastatic spheroids during intra-abdominal dissemination in epithelial ovarian cancer. Oncogene 37, 5127–5135 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-018-0317-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41388-018-0317-x
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